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This book has benefited from the comments and questions of so many friends and colleagues in the far-flung world of political theory that it is hard to know where to begin these acknowledgments. Closest to home, Cornell remains a stimulating place to think and work, and I am grateful to the generous colleagues who have discussed the ideas in this book with me, including Richard Bensel, Susan Buck-Morss, Paul Fleming, Jill Frank, Alex Livingston, Tracy McNulty, Aziz Rana, Camille Robcis, Neil Saccamano, and Sid Tarrow. A special thanks to Patchen Markell, who offered probing and insightful comments on most of the manuscript. The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s John E. Sawyer Seminar on “The Political Will” brought together a terrific group of scholars to discuss topics close to the heart of this book, and I am grateful to all of them. The political theory graduate students at Cornell remain a source of inspiration. Special thanks to the participants in my seminar on “Political Theory and Aesthetics,” and to Nolan Bennett, Kevin Duong, Mike Gorup, Nazli Konya, and Ed Quish. I will never stop learning from Isaac Kramnick, who passed away before this book was finished. I miss him dearly.
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